Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas began crisis talks with Egypt yesterday about restoring order at the breached Gaza border, facing a challenge from his Hamas rivals for control of the frontier.
Earlier, Hamas had demanded a central role in controlling the Gaza Strip's border with Egypt in an open challenge to Abbas.
Hamas Islamists, who seized control of Gaza last June after routing Abbas's secular Fatah forces, blasted open the Egyptian border last week in defiance of an Israeli-led blockade, allowing hundreds of thousands of Gazans to pour into Egypt to stock up on goods in short-supply.
The make-shift border remained open for an eighth day yesterday, with Palestinians moving freely into the Egyptian side of the town.
A delegation from the Islamist Hamas movement including top leader Mahmoud Zahar, crossed into Egypt through Rafah where they were met by Egyptian officials before continuing on to Cairo to join other leaders in their organization for talks with Egyptian officials.
"Egypt is our gate to the Arab, Islamic and entire world," said Mahmoud Zahar to Arabic satellite news channel al-Jazeera. "Therefore we will not allow the crossing to be used as a tool to suffocate the Palestinian people again."
"Talking about a partial role contradicts reality," he said as he crossed through the Rafah border terminal.
"The reality is that there is a legitimate government. We will not give up our legitimacy to anybody," he said.
Abbas will meet separately in Cairo with Egyptian leaders and has already won US, European and Arab backing for taking control of the Rafah crossing, excluding Hamas.
"We have international support," Abbas aide Yasser Abed Rabbo said. "Hamas should stay out of this."
It is unclear how Abbas would be able to exert control over Rafah given opposition from Hamas, whose forces have command on the ground.
Mubarak was not expected to meet the Hamas representatives given their historic links to Egypt's own powerful Islamist opposition, the Muslim Brotherhood, and the West's rejection of Hamas as a peace partner. In the past he has criticized Hamas's takeover of the Gaza Strip as illegitimate.
Yesterday's visit is the first by a Hamas delegation to Egypt since June.
Hamas sought to make the case that it would be capable of managing the Rafah crossing itself.
The group allowed TV cameras and reporters into the terminal to watch Zahar and other Hamas leaders get their passports stamped by Hamas border guards.
Meanwhile, Egypt's official Al-Ahram newspaper said a deadline for Palestinians to return to Gaza had been set for "the start of next week," citing security sources.
SPEAKING OUT: After Siranudh Scott’s allegations surfaced, celebrities and public figures took to social media to share their own experiences of sexual misconduct and abuse A high-profile alleged sexual abuse case within a wealthy Thai beer brewing family has prompted a wave of painful accounts from survivors of unconnected abuse in the conservative nation. Siranudh Scott, a member of the billionaire Thai family that founded the ubiquitous Singha beer brand, posted an emotional video this month accusing his elder brother Sunit of repeatedly abusing him when he was a teenager. Sunit, who is in his 30s, later denied the allegations in a video posted online, but Singha parent Boonrawd dismissed him from his executive role with the company on Tuesday last week. “I felt I needed to speak
A Hong Kong astronaut is to join a Chinese space mission for the first time as part of a three-person crew launching today, as Beijing edges closer to its goal of landing people on the moon. The Tiangong space station — crewed by teams of three astronauts that are typically rotated every six months — is the crown jewel of China’s space program, boosted by billions in state investment in a bid to catch up with the US and Russia. The Shenzhou-23 mission is to blast off at 11:08pm from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwestern China, carrying three astronauts to
UPGRADED ALERT: The risk inside DR Congo is now considered ‘very high,’ while neighboring countries face a ‘high’ threat as the outbreak continues, the WHO said Ebola is spreading faster than responders can track it in eastern Congo, where health workers managed to follow up with barely one in five identified contacts in a single day. Authorities in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR Congo) reported 83 confirmed infections, 746 suspected cases and 1,603 identified contacts as of Thursday, but health workers were able to follow up on only 342 contacts that day — about 21 percent of the total under monitoring — data released by the DR Congo Ministry of Public Health on Friday showed. The figures suggest the response is falling behind the outbreak itself,
SEEKING ORDER: Rodrigo Paz said that ‘anyone who wants to destroy the nation will have to deal with this president and the full force of the constitution’ Bolivian President Rodrigo Paz on Wednesday said that the nation was at a “breaking point” after nearly a month of protests that have caused shortages of food, fuel and medicine. Paz, who took office six months ago amid the worst economic crisis there in four decades, is battling a groundswell of fury over his policies. The political capital, La Paz, has been besieged by low-income workers and members of the indigenous majority calling for his resignation. “The country needs order and is reaching breaking point,” the 58-year-old said at a public event in La Paz, renewing his appeal for dialogue. On Tuesday, the Bolivian